Jump to navigation

Kenya

Keeping Martha Karua out of court

The Uganda Law Council’s ruling to deny a Kenyan lawyer a certificate to represent opposition leader Kizza Besigye raises concerns about political interference

The Uganda Law Council’s decision to withhold a special temporary certificate for National Rainbow Coalition–Kenya (NARC-Kenya) leader Martha Karua to practise law in Uganda, preventing her from defending opposition leader Kizza Besigye on technical grounds relating to her qualifications and nationality, suggests political interference at the highest level.

Besigye was abducted in the affluent Riverside suburb of Nairobi on 16 November. After four days of being incommunicado, he was arraigned in front of a military court in Kampala on weapons charges, without access to lawyers.

Karua, a former Justice Minister, had been appointed as his senior counsel. She says she will attend court as an observer.

The ULC said that Karua’s plans to represent Besigye were politically motivated.

The Kenyan Bar Council has asserted that the East African Community treaty allows for professionals to have mutual recognition of qualifications and to work across the bloc.

Karua, whose NARC-Kenya party formally withdrew its membership of Raila Odinga’s Azimio la Umoja coalition in November, is one of few senior Kenyan politicians to have been vocal about the recent spike in abductions of both locals and foreign nationals in Kenya (AC Vol 65 No 23, Facing calls for reform, the state hits back &Vol 65 No 25, New alliances on shaky ground).

While Kenyan President William Ruto has denied any involvement in Besigye’s abduction, it is inconceivable that Kenyan law enforcement agencies were unaware of the presence of Ugandan officers in Nairobi. Keeping Karua away from the court lectern would also benefit Ruto as much as Uganda’s Yoweri Museveni.



Related Articles

Facing calls for reform, the state hits back

A wave of murders and abductions at the hands of the police has prompted condemnation from civic activists and diplomats

Initial hopes that the mass protests in June against state corruption and police brutality would persuade President William Samoei Ruto to make the government more accountable were overblown....


New alliances on shaky ground

The putative opposition is enjoying its five seats in government but is hedging its bets before committing to a formal coalition with Ruto

Even by the standards of Kenyan politics, where the bitterest political enemies in one election can become close allies at the next, the five members of Raila Odinga’s...


Peace postponed

There will be no quick peace in Uganda. On 17 September, nearly 1,000 Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) fighters had assembled at the forest clearing of Ri Kwangba, on...


A taxing compromise

This month, President Yoweri Museveni has approved a face-saving deal to break the impasse over the US$360 million in capital gains tax that his government is claiming from...


Looking east, Ruto targets yen and yuan

As dissent mounts, the government is counting on loans, interest rate cuts and a stalled privatisation programme to ease its debt woes

To ease the cashflow crisis that triggered mass protests and weakened the shilling – as the Treasury used precious dollars to pay its Eurobond debts – President William...